II
Hidden
Centres of the Mysteries in the Middle Ages
Yesterday I began to speak to you of the spiritual-scientific strivings
of the ninth or tenth century after Christ. We learnt how such strivings
were still seriously followed as late as the end of the eighteenth
and beginning of the nineteenth centuries; and I endeavoured to tell
you something of the content of these strivings. Today I should like
to touch more on their historical aspect. We have to remember that
the Mysteries of ancient times were of such a nature and character
that in the places of the Mysteries an actual meeting with the Gods
was able to take place. I described in the lectures recently given at
the Christmas Foundation how the human being who was an Initiate or
was about to receive Initiation could verily meet with the Gods. And
it was also possible, in the Mysteries, to discover places which by
their very locality were expressly fitted and prepared to induce such
meeting with the Gods.
The preparation of these
centres and the adoption of them as the official places — if I
may use so crude an expression — is at the foundation of the
impulses for all the older civilisations. Gradually, however,
knowledge and understanding of these places disappeared; we may even
say that from the time of the fourth century it is no longer to be
found in its old form. Here and there we can still find survivals,
but the knowledge is no longer so strict and exact. Notwithstanding
this, however, Initiation never ceased; it was only the form in which
the candidates found their way that changed. I have already indicated
how things were in the Middle Ages. I have told you how here and
there were individuals, living simple, humble unpretentious lives,
who did not gather around them a circle of official pupils in one
particular place, but whose pupils were scattered in various
directions in accordance with the karma of mankind or the karma of
some people or nation. I have described one such instance in what I
said about Johannes Tauler in my book
Mysticism and Modern Thought.
There is no need for me to speak about that here. I
should like however to tell you of another typical example, one that
had very great influence, lasting from the twelfth and thirteenth on
into the fifteenth century. The spiritual streams that were working
during these centuries are in large measure to be traced to the
events of which I would like now to speak. Let me give you first, as
it were, a sketch of the situation.
The time when these events
took place is round about the year 1200 A.D.
There were at that time a great number of people, especially younger
people, who felt within them the urge for higher knowledge, for a
union with the spiritual world — one may truthfully say, for a
meeting with the Gods. And the whole situation and condition of the
times was such that very often it looked as though a man who was
searching and striving in this way found his teacher almost by
chance. In those days one could not find a teacher by means of books,
it could only come about in an entirely personal way. And often it
looked from without like a chance happening, although in reality deep
connections of destiny were at work in the event. And it was so in
the case of the pupil of whom I am now going to tell you.
This pupil found a teacher
in a place in Middle Europe through just such an apparently chance
event. He met an older man of whom he at once had the feeling: He
will be able to lead me farther in that search which is the deepest
impulse of my soul. And now let me give you the gist of a
conversation between them. I do not of course mean that only one
such conversation took place between teacher and pupil, but I am
compressing several into one.
The pupil speaks to the
teacher and tells him of his earnest desire to be able to see into
the spiritual world; but it seems to him as though the nature of man
as it is in that time — it is about the twelfth century —
does not allow him to penetrate to the spiritual worlds.
Nevertheless, he feels that in Nature one has something that is the
work, the creation of divine-spiritual Beings. When one looks at what
the objects of Nature are in their deeper meaning, when one observes
how the processes of Nature take their course, one cannot but
recognise that behind these creations stands the working of
divine-spiritual Beings. But man cannot come through to these
spiritual Beings. The pupil, who was a young man somewhere between 25
and 28 or so, felt strongly and definitely that the humanity of the
time, because of the kind of connection of the physical body with the
soul, cannot come through, it has hindrances in itself.
The teacher began by
putting him to the test. He said to him: You have your eyes, you have
your ears: look with your eyes on the things of Nature, hear with
your ears what goes on in Nature; the Spiritual reveals itself
through colour and through tone, and as you look and listen, you
cannot help feeling how it reveals itself in these.
Then the pupil replied:
Yes, but when I use my eyes, when I look out into the world, with all
its colour, then it is as though my eye stops the colour, as though
the colour suddenly turns numb and cold when it reaches the eye. When
I listen with my ear to tones, it is as though the sounds turn to
stone in my ear; the frozen colours and the dead, hard sounds will
not let the spirit of Nature through. And the teacher said: But there
is still the Revelation of the religious life. In Religion you are
taught how Gods made and fashioned the world, and how the Christ
entered into the evolution of time and became Man. What Nature cannot
give you, does not Revelation give?
And the pupil said:
Revelation does indeed speak powerfully to my heart, but I cannot
really comprehend it, I cannot connect what is out there in Nature
with what Revelation says to me. It is impossible to bring them into
relation with one another. And so, since I do not understand Nature,
since Nature reveals nothing to me, neither do I understand the
Revelation of Religion.
And the teacher made
answer: I understand you well; it is even so. If you must speak thus,
if it is with your heart and soul as you say, then you, as you stand
in the world today, will not be able to understand either Nature or
Revelation: for you live in a body that has undergone the Fall —
such was the manner of speaking in those days — and this
“fallen” body is not suited to the earthly environment in
which you are living. The earthly environment does not afford the
conditions for using your senses and your feeling and your
understanding in such a way that you may behold in Nature and in
Revelation a light, an enlightenment that comes from the Gods. If you
are willing, I will lead you away out of the Nature of your earthly
environment, which is simply unsuited to your being, I will lead you
away from it and give you the opportunity to understand Revelation
and Nature better. And the teacher and the pupil discussed together
when this should take place.
One day, the teacher led
the pupil up a high mountain, whence the surface of the Earth with
its trees and flowers could no longer be seen at all — you know
how this is so on high mountains — but as the pupil stood there
with his teacher he could see below him as it were a sea of cloud,
which completely covered the Earth with which he was familiar; up
there one was far removed from the affairs of Earth — at all
events, the situation suggested this. One looked out into space with
its great masses of cloud, and one saw below as it were a sea, a
moving, surging sea composed entirely of cloud. Morning mist, and the
breath of morning in the air! Then the teacher began to speak to the
pupil. He spoke of the wide spaces of the worlds, he spoke of the
cosmic distances, of how, when one gazes out into these vastnesses in
the night time, one sees the stars shining forth from thence. He told
him many things, so that gradually the heart of the pupil, removed as
it were far away from the Earth, became wholly given up to Nature and
the manner of Nature's existence.
The preparation continued
until the pupil came into a mood of soul which may be indicated by
the following comparison. It was as though, not for a moment only,
but for quite a long time, all that he had ever experienced during
his earthly life in this incarnation were something he had dreamed.
The scene now spread out before him, the rolling waves of cloud, the
wide sea of cloud, with here and there a drift rising up like the
crest of a wave; the far spaces of the worlds, broken here and there
by rising shapes of cloud — and scarcely even that, for there
was no more than a glimpse here and there of cloud forms at the
farthest end of space — this whole scene showing so little
variation, having so little content in comparison with the manifold
variety of all his experiences down below on the surface of the
Earth, was now for the pupil like the content of his day-waking
consciousness. And everything he had ever experienced on Earth was
for him no more than the memory of a dream he had dreamed. Now, now,
so it seemed to him, he had woken up. And whilst he continued to grow
more and more awake, behold, from a cleft in the rock which he had
not hitherto noticed, came forth a boy of 10 or 11 years old. This
boy made a strange impression upon him, for he at once recognised in
him his own self in the 10th or 11th year of his age. What stood
before him was the Spirit of his Youth.
You will easily guess, my
dear friends, that to this scene is due one of the impulses that made
me introduce into the Mystery Plays the figure of the Spirit of
Johannes' Youth. [Footnote: The Soul's Awakening. Scene
6. Four Mystery Plays.] It is the “motif” alone you must
think of, certainly not of anything like photography. The Mystery
Plays are no occult romances where you have but to find the key, and
all is plain!
The pupil stood before the
Spirit of his boyhood, his very self. He, with his 15 or 28 years,
stood face to face with the Spirit of his youth. And a conversation
could take place, guided by the teacher, but in reality taking place
between the pupil and his own younger self. Such a conversation has a
unique character; you may see that for yourselves in the Mystery
Plays, from the style that is there followed. For when a man is face
to face with the Spirit of his own youth — and such a thing is
always possible — then he gives something of his ripe
understanding to the childlike ideas of the Spirit of his youth, and
at the same time the Spirit of his youth gives something of his
freshness, his childlikeness, to what the man of older years
possesses. The meeting becomes fruitful in a spiritual way through
the very fact of this mutual interchange. And this conversation had
the result that the pupil came to understand Revelation, the
Revelation that is given in religion.
The conversation turned
especially on Genesis, the beginning of the Old Testament, and on the
Christ becoming Man. Under the guidance of the teacher and because of
the special kind of fruitfulness that worked in the conversation it
ended with the pupil saying these words: “Now I understand what
Spirit it is that works in the Revelation. Only when one is
transplanted, as it were, far away from the earthly into the heights
of the Ether, there to comprehend the Ether-heights with the help of
the power of childhood — this power of childhood being
projected into the later years of life — only then does one
understand Revelation aright. And now I understand wherefore the Gods
have given to man Revelation — for the reason that men are not
able, in the state in which they are on Earth, to see through the
works of Nature and discover behind them the works of the Gods.
Therefore did the Gods give them the Revelation which is ordinarily
quite incomprehensible in the mature years of life, but which can be
understood when childhood becomes real and living in the years of
maturity. Thus it is really something abnormal, to understand the
Revelation.”
All this made a powerful
impression on the pupil. And the impression remained; he could not
forget it. The Spirit of his youth vanished. The first phase of the
instruction was over. A second had now to come. And the second took
its course in the following way.
Once more the teacher led
the pupil forth, but this time on a different path. He did not now
lead him to a mountain top, but he took him to a mountain where there
was a cave, through which they passed to deep, inner clefts, going
down as far as the strata of the mines. There the pupil was with the
teacher in the deep places of the Earth, not now in the Ether-heights
raised high above the Earth, but in the depths, far down below the
surface of the Earth.
Once again it was for the
consciousness of the pupil as though all that he had ever experienced
on Earth went past him like dreams. For he was living down there in
an environment in which his consciousness was particularly awakened
to perceive his relation with the depths of the Earth. What took
place for him was really none other than what lies behind such
legends as are told, for example, of the Emperor Barbarossa and his
life in Kyffhauser, or of Charles the Great and his life beneath a
mountain near Salzburg. It was something of this nature that took
place now, if only for a short time: it was a life in the depths of
the Earth, far removed from the earthly life of man.
And again the teacher was
able, by speaking with the pupil in a special way, to bring to his
consciousness the fact — this time — of his union with
the Earth-depths. And now there came forth out of a wall an old man,
who was less recognisable to the pupil than the Spirit of his Youth,
but of whom he nevertheless felt that after many years he would
himself become that old man. He knew that there stood before him his
own self in future old age. And now followed a similar conversation,
this time between the pupil and his own older self — himself as
an old man — once more a conversation under the guidance of the
teacher.
What resulted from this
second conversation was different from what came from the first; for
now there began to arise within the pupil a consciousness of his own
physical organisation. He felt how his blood flowed, he felt every
single vein in his body; he went with it, went with the nerve fibres;
he was made aware of all the single organs of his human organisation
and the meaning and significance of each for the whole. And he felt
too how all that is related to man out in the Cosmos works into him.
He felt the inworking of the plant-world, in its blossoming, in its
rooting; he felt how the mineral element in the Earth works in the
human organism. Down there in the depths he felt the forces of the
Earth — how they are organised and how they circulate within
his being; he felt them creating there within him, undergoing change,
destroying and building substances; he felt the Earth creating, and
weaving and being, in man. The result of this conversation was that
when the old man, who was himself, had disappeared, the pupil could
say: “Now has the Earth, in which I have been incarnated, at
last really spoken to me through her beings; now a moment has been
mine when I have seen through the things and processes of Nature,
seen through them to the work of the Gods that is behind these things
and processes of Nature.”
The teacher then led the
pupil out again on to the Earth, and as he took leave of him, said:
Behold now! The man of today and the Earth of today are so little
suited to one another that you must receive the Revelation of
Religion from the Spirit of your own Youth, receiving it on the
mountain high up above the Earth, and you must receive the Revelation
of Nature deep below the Earth, in clefts that are far down below the
surface of the Earth. And if you can succeed in illuminating what
your soul has felt in the hollow clefts of the Earth, with the light
your soul has brought from the mountain, then you will attain unto
wisdom.
Such was the path by which
a deepening of the soul was brought about in those times — it
was about the year 1200 A.D. — this is how
the soul became filled with wisdom. The pupil of whom I have told you
was thereby brought verily to Initiation, and he now knew what power
he must put forth in his soul to arouse to activity the light of the
heights and the feeling of the depths. Further instruction was then
given him by the teacher, showing him how self-knowledge really
always consists in this: — one perceives on the one hand that
which lies high above Earth-man, and on the other hand that which
lies deep below Earth-man: these two must meet in man's own
inner being. Then does man find within his own being the power of God
the Creator.
The Initiation that I have
described to you is a characteristic example of the Initiations which
led afterwards to what we may designate as “mediaeval
Mysticism.” It was a mysticism that sought for self-knowledge,
but always in order to find in the self the way to the divine. In
later times this mysticism became abstract. The concrete union with
the external world, as it was given for these pupils who were carried
up into the Ether-heights and down into the Earth-depths, was no
longer sought for. Consequently there was not the same deep stirring
of the soul, nor did the whole experience attain to such a degree of
intensity. And yet there was still the search, there was still the
inner impulse to seek within for the God, for God the Creator.
Fundamentally speaking, all the seeking and striving of Meister
Eckhart, of Johannes Tauler and of the later mystics whom I have
described in my book
Mysticism and Modern Thought
owes its impulse to these earlier mediaeval Initiates.
Those who worked faithfully
in the sense of such mediaeval forms of Initiation were however very
much misunderstood, and it is by no means easy for us to find out
what these pupils of the mediaeval Initiates were really like.
It is, as you know,
possible to come a considerable distance along the path into the
spiritual world. Those who follow thoroughly and actively what is
given in my book
Knowledge of the Higher Worlds and its Attainment
do find the way into the spiritual worlds. Everything that has been
physically real in the past is of course only to be found now by way
of the spiritual world — therefore also such scenes as I have
now described, for there are no material documents that record such
scenes. There are however regions of the spiritual world which are
hard of access even for a very advanced stage of spiritual power. In
order to research into these regions, we must have come to the point
of actually having intercourse with the Beings of the spiritual
world, in a quite simple, natural way, as we have with men on Earth.
When we have attained so far, we shall come to perceive and
understand the connection between these Initiates of whom I have told
you, and their pupils, e.g., such a pupil as Raimon Lull, who lived
from 1235 to 1315 and who, in what history can tell of him, seems to
leave us full of doubts and questions.
What you can learn of
Raimon Lull by studying historical documents is indeed very scanty.
But if you are able to enter into a personal relationship with Raimon
Lull — you will allow me to use the expression: perhaps, in the
light of all I have been telling you lately, it will not sound so
paradoxical to you after all — if you are able to do this, then
he shows himself to you as someone quite different from what the
historical documents make him out to be. For he shows himself to be
pre-eminently a personality who, under the influence and inspiration
of the very Initiate of whom I have spoken to you as the “pupil,”
made the resolve to use all his power to bring about a renewal in his
own time of the Mysteries of the World, of the Logos, as they
had been in olden times. He set himself to renew the Mysteries of the
Logos by means of that self-knowledge for which so powerful an
impulse was working in the twelfth and thirteenth centuries. The
so-called Ars Magna of Raimon Lull is to be adjudged from this point
of view. He said to himself: When man speaks, then we really have in
speech a microcosm. That which man utters in speech is in truth the
whole man, concentrated in the organs of speech; the secret and
mystery of each single word is to be sought in the whole human being,
and therefore in the world, in the Cosmos.
And so the idea came to
Raimon Lull that one must look for the secret of speech first in the
human being, by diving down, as it were, from the speech organs into
the whole organism of the human being; and then in the Cosmos, for
the whole human organism is to be explained and understood out of the
Cosmos. Let us suppose, for example, we want to understand the true
significance of the sound A (as in “father”). The point
is that the sound A, which comes about through the forming and
shaping of the outgoing breath, depends on a certain inner attitude
of the etheric body, which you can easily learn to know today.
Eurhythmy will show it you; for this attitude of the etheric body is
carried over in Eurhythmy to the physical body and becomes the
Eurhythmic movement for the sound A.
All this was not by any
means fully clear to Raimon Lull; with him it was more of a dim,
intuitive feeling. He did however get so far as to follow the inner
attitude or gesture of the human being out into the Cosmos and say,
for example: If you look in the direction of the constellation of the
Lion (Leo), and then look in the direction of the Balance (Libra),
the connection between the two lines of vision will give you A. Or
again, turn your eye in the direction of Saturn. Saturn stops your
line of vision, comes in the way. And if Saturn, for example, stands
in front of the Ram (Aries), you have, as it were, to go round the
Ram with Saturn. And then you have from out of the Cosmos the feeling
of O. [Footnote: Readers unfamiliar with the movements in Eurhythmy
for the sounds of speech, are recommended to turn to the first three
chapters of the book
Eurhythmy as Visible Speech
(15 lectures) by Rudolf Steiner]
From ideas like these,
though dimly perceived, Raimon Lull went on to find certain
geometrical figures, the corners and sides of which he named with the
letters of the alphabet. And he was quite sure that when one
experiences a feeling and impulse to draw lines in the figures —
diagonals, for instance, across a pentagon, uniting the five points
in different ways — then one has to see in these lines
different combinations of sounds, which combinations of sounds
express certain secrets of the World-All, of the Cosmos. Thus did
Raimon Lull look for a kind of renaissance of the secrets of the
Logos, as they were known and spoken of in the Ancient Mysteries. You
will find it all quite misrepresented in the historical documents.
When however one enters little by little into a personal relationship
with Raimon Lull, then one comes to see how in all these efforts he
was trying to solve once more the riddle of the Cosmic Word. And it
is a fact that the pupils of the mediaeval Initiates continued for
several centuries to spend their lives in endeavours of this kind. It
was an intensive striving, first to immerse oneself in man, and then
to come forth as it were, to rise out of the human being into the
secrets of the Cosmos.
Thus did these wise men —
for we may truly call them so — seek to unite Revelation with
Nature. They believed — and much of their belief was
well-founded — that in this way they could come behind the
Revelation of Religion and behind the Revelation of Nature. For it
was quite clear to them that man, as he is now living on the Earth,
was destined and intended to become the Fourth Hierarchy, but that he
has “fallen” from his true and proper nature, and become
more deeply involved in physical existence than he should be, thereby
at the same time losing the power adequately to develop his soul and
spirit. It was from such strivings that there arose, later on, what
we know as the Rosicrucian Movement.
It was at a place of
instruction of the Rosicrucians, of the first, original Rosicrucians,
that the scene I have depicted to you today, the scene between the
teacher and the pupil, at first upon a high mountain and then down in
a deep cleft of the Earth, emerged like a kind of Fata Morgana, came
again as it were like a ghost, reflected within a Rosicrucian school
as knowledge. And it taught the pupils to recognise how man has by
inner effort and striving to attain to two things, if he would come
to a true self-knowledge, if he would find again his adjustment to
the Earth and be able at last to become in actual reality a member of
the Fourth Hierarchy. For within the Rosicrucian School the
possibility was given to recognise what it was that had taken place
with the pupil when he had seen before him in bodily form the Spirit
of his Youth. A loosening of the astral body had taken place; the
astral body, that was stronger at that moment than it otherwise ever
is in life, was loosened. And in this loosening of the astral body
the pupil had come to know the meaning and significance of
Revelation. And again, what took place with the pupil in the depths
of the Earth was also made clear and comprehensible in the
Rosicrucian School. This time the astral body was drawn right back
within. It was contracted and drawn together, so that the pupil was
able to perceive and apprehend the certainty of man's own inner
being.
And now exercises were
found within Rosicrucianism, comparatively simple exercises,
consisting in symbolic figures, to which one gave oneself up in
devotion and meditation. The force and power of which the soul became
possessed through devotion to these figures, enabled the students on
the one hand to loosen the astral body and become like the pupil on
the mountain top in the Ether-heights, and on the other hand, through
the compression and contraction of the astral body, to become like
the pupil in the clefts of the Earth. And it was then possible,
without the help, as before, of external environment, simply through
performing a powerful inner exercise, to enter into the inner being
of man.
I have given you here a
picture of something to which I have made a slight allusion in my
preface to the new edition of the book
Mysticism and Modern Thought.
I said there that what we find in Meister Eckhart, in
Johannes Tauler, in Nicolas Cusa, in Valentine Wiegel and the rest,
is a late product of a great and mighty striving of mankind, an
earlier, original striving that preceded them all. And this earlier
striving in the Spirit, this search for self-knowledge, in connection
on the one hand with Revelation and on the other hand with the
illumination of Nature — I wanted to show you today how this is
one of the currents that take their course in the so-called “Dark
Ages.”
The man of modern times
conjures darkness into the Middle Ages out of his own imagination. In
reality there were in those times many enlightened spirits, of such a
kind however, that the “enlightened” spirits of today
cannot understand their light and consequently remain in the dark.
It is indeed characteristic
of modern times, that men take light for darkness and darkness for
light. If however we can look into what lies behind the literature of
those earlier times and are able to see that of which the literature
gives only a dim reflection, then we may receive a powerful and
lasting impression.
Something of this I wanted
to show you today: tomorrow we will complete the picture.
|